Project Activities
The researchers will use a mixed method iterative research design to develop, refine, and pilot test a professional development model for early career teachers that targets enhancing their effectiveness with students (classroom management and student engagement) and connectedness with colleagues.
Structured Abstract
Setting
Three public schools (kindergarten to eighth grade) in a large urban center in Illinois.
Sample
Study participants will include 12 to 15 early career teachers (i.e., those with three or fewer years teaching experience), 9 key opinion leader (KOL) mentors who are currently teachers within the three study schools, and 2 coaches who are retired teachers with experience in the school district.
A professional development model for early career teachers that targets their effectiveness with students (classroom management and student engagement) and connectedness with colleagues. The model includes two specific components: (a) Classroom Support in the form of knowledge dissemination from teacher mentors and classroom-based coaching from experienced teachers in the district to provide modeling, demonstration, and feedback on classroom management and student motivational practices; and (b) a Professional Learning Communities program that promotes mutual support and shared leadership to foster connectedness and trust among teachers within a school.
Research design and methods
The research team will use a mixed methods research design to establish the feasibility and acceptability of the professional development model, and the promise of the model for impacting the proximal teacher outcomes of increased effectiveness (management and engagement of students) and connectedness (relationships with fellow teachers and connection to the school community). In Year 1, the research team will develop and implement the classroom support curriculum and the Professional Learning Communities program in one school to pilot the proposed procedures. In Years 2 and 3, the revised model will be fully packaged and implemented in two additional schools to test the model's feasibility and promise for increasing teacher effectiveness and connectedness.
Control condition
There is no control condition.
Key measures
Fidelity of the professional development model will be measured using researcher-developed checklists. Early career teachers, teacher mentors and coaches (retired veteran teachers) will participate in semi-structured interviews and focus groups to assess in depth their experience with the professional development model and conditions that promote and hinder implementation. The potential impact of the model on teachers' effectiveness will be measured using semi-structured interviews, the Teacher Sense of Efficacy Scale (TSE), and the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS). The potential impact of the model on teachers' sense of connectedness will be measured using semi-structured interviews, sociometric interviews, the Teacher-Teacher Trust Scale, the Teacher Commitment Scale, and the Professional Community Index.
Data analytic strategy
Qualitative methods, including thematic analyses of interview and focus group data, will help assess the feasibility and acceptability of the PD model. Quantitative methods will be used to determine whether the PD model impacts proximal teacher outcomes related to effectiveness in managing classrooms and motivating learners and connectedness to colleagues. Using a within series (A/B) single case design, variability in the level, trend, and stability of a data series will be assessed as a phase change is introduced (i.e., initiation of the PD model). Reliable Change Index Scores will be used as ancillary evidence that the PD model shows promise in impacting the effectiveness of early career teachers. Social network analyses will help evaluate the promise of the model in increasing the connectedness of early career teachers to colleagues. Triangulation of qualitative semi-structured interviews, rating scales and a standardized direct classroom observation system (i.e., the CLASS) will be used to obtain multiple sources of evidence and confirm findings through their corroboration across different research methodologies.
People and institutions involved
IES program contact(s)
Project contributors
Products and publications
Products will include prototypes of all intervention manuals, training manuals, and measures to evaluate the outcomes of interest for the PD model. The fully developed PD model targeting the effectiveness and connectedness of early career teachers working in kindergarten through eighth-grade classrooms in poor, urban environments can be disseminated to schools and will be used in designing the Goal 3 study.
Publications:
Journal article, monograph, or newsletter
Atkins, M.S., Cappella, E.C., Shernoff, E.S., Mehta, T.G., and Gufstafson, E. (2017). Schooling and Children's Mental Health: Realigning Resources to Reduce Disparities and Advance Public Health. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 13: 123-147.
Shernoff, E., Lakind, D., Frazier, S., and Jacobsons, L. (2015). Coaching Early Career Teachers in Urban Elementary Schools: A Mixed-Method Study. School Mental Health, 7(1): 6-20.
Shernoff, E.S., Frazier, S.L., Marinez-Lora, A.M., Lakind, D., Atkins, M.S., Jakobsons, L., Hamre, B.K., Bhaumik, D.K., Parker-Katz, M., Neal, J.W., Smylie, M.A., and Patel, D.A. (2016). Expanding the Role of School Psychologists to Support Early Career Teachers: A Mixed-Method Study. School Psychology Review, 45(2): 226-249.
Shernoff, E.S., Marinez-Lora, A., Frazier, S.L., Jakobsons, L.J., Atkins, M.S., and Bonner, D. (2011). Teachers Supporting Teachers in Urban Schools: What Iterative Research Designs can Teach Us. School Psychology Review, 40(4): 465-485.
Questions about this project?
To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.